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Would you like to know more? Feel free to read tax blogs by Janis Taukacs or resolve here any tax disputes, or even better - plan your tax matters here timely, so you can avoid such disputes.
Tony Dajer is a retired Emergency Department director from New York. He was an Emergency Room doctor in the closest hospital to the World Trade Center during 9/11 terrorist attacks, where around 3000 people died. In 2020 The NewYorker had an article about Tony and the leadership lessons in a crisis situation, a topic we focused on in this podcast.
In this conversation we discussed:
* how is it to work in a war zone (hospital) in Nicaragua;
* Superbowl, Bad Bunny and growing up in Puerto Rico;
* 1993 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center;
* what was it like in the hospital when the 9/11 happened;
* how did colleagues react in the times of uncertainty, no phone connections, trauma and fear?
* connection and solidarity of people in a moment of crisis and why it disappeared;
* how to break barriers;
* mental health and resilience in a moment of constant crisis;
* what businesses could learn from doctors;
* new book Tony is writing about his mistakes made and lessons learned;
* what could be improved in the US tax system from Tony’s perspective;
* management lessons learned:
* when there is a crisis, the brain functions razor-sharp,
* people in the teams then rise to the occasion, were improvising and self-organising;
* practice and hierarchy helps the best (even if as a drill), not procedures;
* how teams should be built and organised;
* police dptm and fire dptm did not communicate properly, thus more lives could be saved;
* when things are happening so quickly, thus some decisions are not the best ones;
* more people should have been assigned to hold patients’ hand to establish an emotional connection.
By Jānis Taukačs5
22 ratings
Would you like to know more? Feel free to read tax blogs by Janis Taukacs or resolve here any tax disputes, or even better - plan your tax matters here timely, so you can avoid such disputes.
Tony Dajer is a retired Emergency Department director from New York. He was an Emergency Room doctor in the closest hospital to the World Trade Center during 9/11 terrorist attacks, where around 3000 people died. In 2020 The NewYorker had an article about Tony and the leadership lessons in a crisis situation, a topic we focused on in this podcast.
In this conversation we discussed:
* how is it to work in a war zone (hospital) in Nicaragua;
* Superbowl, Bad Bunny and growing up in Puerto Rico;
* 1993 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center;
* what was it like in the hospital when the 9/11 happened;
* how did colleagues react in the times of uncertainty, no phone connections, trauma and fear?
* connection and solidarity of people in a moment of crisis and why it disappeared;
* how to break barriers;
* mental health and resilience in a moment of constant crisis;
* what businesses could learn from doctors;
* new book Tony is writing about his mistakes made and lessons learned;
* what could be improved in the US tax system from Tony’s perspective;
* management lessons learned:
* when there is a crisis, the brain functions razor-sharp,
* people in the teams then rise to the occasion, were improvising and self-organising;
* practice and hierarchy helps the best (even if as a drill), not procedures;
* how teams should be built and organised;
* police dptm and fire dptm did not communicate properly, thus more lives could be saved;
* when things are happening so quickly, thus some decisions are not the best ones;
* more people should have been assigned to hold patients’ hand to establish an emotional connection.